Category Archives: ACRL

SCIL Works 2016 — Crossing the Threshold: Engaging with the ACRL Framework

***Call for Proposals due Friday, December 4, 2015, by 5pm***

When: Friday, February 19, 2016

Where: California State University, Fullerton

Southern California Instruction Librarians (SCIL) will be hosting SCIL Works on February 19, 2016. This annual mini-conference, offers librarians the opportunity to share their best practices, innovative pedagogy, and creative solutions with colleagues. SCIL Works 2016 will focus on the Association of College and Research Libraries’ (ACRL) Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education.

For the last fifteen years, the Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education has served as a guiding document for librarians as they designed, taught, and assessed information literacy instruction sessions. According to the Framework, “the rapidly changing higher education environment, along with the dynamic and often uncertain information ecosystem in which all of us work and live, require new attention to be focused on foundational ideas about that ecosystem.”

Thus, the Framework introduces a new set of core concepts, or frames, central to information literacy that include the following:

  • Authority is Constructed and Contextual
  • Information Creation as a Process
  • Information Has Value
  • Research as Inquiry
  • Scholarship as Conversation
  • Searching as Strategic Exploration

We seek proposals that focus on teaching, learning, and practices that engage with the ACRL Framework. How are librarians incorporating the Framework into their teaching? What does the typical one-shot session look like when re-designed with the Framework in mind? What do the frames look like in specific disciplines? How are the learning goals for each frame, as described in the knowledge practices and dispositions, addressed? How are libraries and librarians implementing the ACRL Framework?

Example topics could include:

  • Class activities or teaching collaborations that explore various frames
  • Instructional tools created to advance the Framework’s learning goals
  • Challenges or opportunities experienced from implementing the Framework
  • Approaches to the Framework from critical pedagogical perspectives

We are accepting proposals for presentations in one of two formats:

Research & Practice Presentation

An hour-long presentation where the presenter shares his/her research or an effective program or practice with participants, includes 10 minutes for Q&A. Each presentation will be presented twice.

Lightning Round Presentation

A live, 5-minute poster session. This presentation could briefly describe a program or initiative, highlight an online tool or tutorial, or exhibit an assessment process or instrument.

Submissions

Please submit your proposals to Lua Gregory, SCIL Chair, lua_gregory@redlands.edu, by 5:00 pm, Friday, December 4th, 2015.  All submissions will be blind-reviewed by a panel. Presenters will be notified that their submissions have been accepted by Wednesday, December 16th.

Format of Submissions

You can submit your proposal within the body of an email. Be sure to include:

  • Primary contact name, institution, title, phone number, email
  • Other presenters names (if any)
  • Title of presentation — labeling it Research & Practice or Lightning Round
  • Short description of the presentation (no more than 250 words)
  • One paragraph describing how this presentation addresses the theme of the program
  • One learning outcome for attendees

Presenters will receive priority registration.

We appreciate your consideration and look forward to hearing from you!

http://carl-acrl.org/ig/scil/scilworks/

 

 

 

Social Responsibility, Democracy, Education, and Professionalism: Supporting Core Values in Academic and Research Librarianship

Call for Poster Session Proposals:
The Greater New York Chapter of the Association of College and Research Libraries 2015 Symposium
Friday, December 4, 2015

The 2015 ACRL/NY Annual Symposium will use four of ALA’s Core Values of Librarianship as a framework from which to pose questions. What does “social responsibility” mean for academic librarians? How diverse are our libraries and archives, and how democratic do we want them to be? How does supporting lifelong learning and information literacy differ for academic libraries of differing sizes, populations, and missions? How can we make time to grow professionally, given our multiple roles and budget challenges? These and other questions will be explored by noted speakers and panelists. For further information about the symposium, visit http://acrlnysymp2015.wordpress.com/

ACRL/NY invites you to submit a poster session proposal for the 2015 Symposium. Poster sessions can address any of the core values: access, confidentiality and privacy, democracy, diversity, education and lifelong learning, intellectual freedom, the public good, preservation, professionalism, service, and social responsibility. Examples of potential topics include, but are not limited to:

 *   Providing access for underserved users
 *   Fostering lifelong learning in our communities
 *   Examining professionalism and changes to the profession
 *   Meeting the needs of diverse populations
 *   Resisting censorship in academic and research libraries
 *   Defining and striving towards “the public good”
 *   Protecting patron privacy in a time of surveillance
 *   Creating diverse workplaces and learning environments

Please submit your proposal using the online form at https://acrlnysymp2015.wordpress.com/posters/

The deadline for submission is Friday, September 4, 2015.
Accepted posters will be notified by Wednesday, September 30, 2015.

For some helpful poster pointers, check the “poster presentations” tab on the LibGuide at http://stjohns.campusguides.com/researchpresentation

The Symposium will take place on Friday, December 4, 2015 in New York City at:
The William and Anita Newman Vertical Campus Conference Center, Baruch College, 55 Lexington Avenue (at 24th Street) Room 14-220 (14th floor)

We look forward to your submissions!
The 2015 ACRL/NY Symposium Committee

ACRL Student Retention Discussion Group Panelists

The ACRL Student Retention Discussion Group is seeking 3 to 4 panelists for our DG meeting at ALA Annual! We’re looking for librarians who have successfully demonstrated a relationship between libraries and retention- and if you’re local, please consider bringing your IR or assessment person!

Panelists will speak briefly about their experiences and answer questions from attendees. The panel is expected to last approximately 45 minutes, with birds-of-a-feather discussion to follow.

The Discussion Group will meet on Saturday, June 27th from 1-2:30 in San Francisco.

Interested parties should contact Jaime Hammond at jhammond@nv.edu by Friday, April 3rd. Panelists will be notified mid-April.

As always, join us online at http://connect.ala.org/node/173037

Jaime Hammond, Naugatuck Valley Community College & Nicole Pagowsky, University of Arizona Student Retention Discussion Group Co Conveners

 

Association of College and Research Libraries conference scholarships

The Association of College and Research Libraries offers scholarships in six categories for ACRL 2015. Applications are due Friday, November 7, 2014. Individuals may apply for more than one scholarship if they are qualified however; only one scholarship award per person is permitted. ACRL encourages applications from all over the globe for participation at the conference, or online through our Virtual Conference scholarships
For more information go to: http://conference.acrl.org/scholarships-pages-162.php

The Academic Librarian in the Open Access Future

Call for Poster Session Proposals:

The Greater New York Chapter of the Association of College and Research Libraries 2014 Symposium

Friday, December 5, 2014

The 2014 ACRL/NY Annual Symposium “The Academic Librarian in the Open Access Future” will consider new opportunities and real challenges for academic librarians as the movement toward open access (OA) begins to impact our users and our institutions in increasingly complex ways. Through case studies grounded in a range of institutional contexts, we will explore the role of librarians in the open access debate and projects. During small-group debriefing sessions, participants will have an opportunity to strategize with peers about how to support their users and find potential collaborators. For further information about the symposium, visit: http://acrlnysymp2014.wordpress.com/

ACRL/NY invites you to submit a poster session proposal for the 2014 Symposium.  Your poster session can address academic librarians’ roles vis-à-vis any issue related to this theme.  Examples include but are not limited to:

  • Open Access Collaborations
  • Open Access Literacy
  • Scholarly Publishing
  • Author’s Rights
  • Support for Faculty Researchers
  • Institutional Repositories
  • Students as Content Producers
  • Open Access Workflows
  • Copyright, Fair Use and Public Domain
  • Libraries and Licensing
  • International Intellectual Property
  • Orphan Works
  • Discoverability
  • Digital Rights Management
  • OA Policy Initiatives

Please submit your proposal using the online form athttps://acrlnyforms.wufoo.com/forms/poster-sessions-application/

The deadline for submission is Friday, September 12, 2014

Accepted posters will be notified by Tuesday, September 30, 2014.

For some helpful poster pointers, check the “poster presentations” tab on the LibGuide athttp://stjohns.campusguides.com/researchpresentation

The Symposium will take place on Friday, December 5, 2014 in New York City at:

The William and Anita Newman Vertical Campus Conference Center, Baruch College, 55 Lexington Avenue (at 24th Street) Room 14-220 (14th floor)

We look forward to your submissions!

The 2014 ACRL/NY Symposium Committee